Here is a long story short.
On one of our IIS platforms, I am running Microsoft CMS, which
utilizes ASP.NET and CSharp.
After changing some code, I noticed that old ASP page code will be
shown/executed when a certain amount of time has elapsed. For
example, if on one page I told it to respond with 'Dog' 3 months ago,
then I changed the code to respond as 'Cat', it responds as 'Cat' for
a bit, then after a time (days/week?), it starts responding with 'Dog'
again, even though the CSharp/ASP pages don't contain 'Dog' anymore.
I assumed this was a caching issue, and recently went into IIS,
Website-->Web Sites-->Home Directory-->Configuration-->Cache Options
and changed from 'Cache limited...', to 'Do not cache ASP...'.
I have yet to see if this will do the trick, but, I was hoping anyone
else could point me in the right direction,if I am doing in the wrong
one.
Thank you in advance.
Dave<goldborder@.gmail.comwrote in message
news:1173967893.356701.147310@.o5g2000hsb.googlegro ups.com...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Hi All,
>
Here is a long story short.
>
On one of our IIS platforms, I am running Microsoft CMS, which
utilizes ASP.NET and CSharp.
>
After changing some code, I noticed that old ASP page code will be
shown/executed when a certain amount of time has elapsed. For
example, if on one page I told it to respond with 'Dog' 3 months ago,
then I changed the code to respond as 'Cat', it responds as 'Cat' for
a bit, then after a time (days/week?), it starts responding with 'Dog'
again, even though the CSharp/ASP pages don't contain 'Dog' anymore.
>
I assumed this was a caching issue, and recently went into IIS,
Website-->Web Sites-->Home Directory-->Configuration-->Cache Options
and changed from 'Cache limited...', to 'Do not cache ASP...'.
>
I have yet to see if this will do the trick, but, I was hoping anyone
else could point me in the right direction,if I am doing in the wrong
one.
>
Thank you in advance.
>
Dave
You talking classic ASP or ASP.NET here ?
It the former, place this on top of the page
<% Response.CacheControl = "no-cache" %>
Just below the
<%@.LANGUAGE="VBSCRIPT" CODEPAGE="1252"%>
Never heard of it caching for months though.
If it's ASP.NET then I usually like to delete the CAC after updating the
site.
--
Simon
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